// include the latest version of the regex crate in your Cargo.toml
extern crate regex;
use regex::Regex;
fn main() {
let regex = Regex::new(r#"(?sx)(?P<content>.*?) # Content up to next tag
(?P<markup> # Entire tag
<!\[CDATA\[(?P<cdata>.+?)]]>| # <![CDATA[ ... ]]>
<!--(?P<comment>.+?)-->| # <!-- Comment -->
</\s*(?P<close_tag>\w+)\s*>| # </tag>
<(?P<tag>\w+) # <tag ...
(?P<attributes>
(?P<attribute>\s+
# <snip>: Use this part to get the attributes out of 'attributes' group.
(?P<attribute_name>\w+)
(?:\s*=\s*
(?P<attribute_value>
[\w:/.\-]+| # Unquoted
(?=(?P<_v> # Quoted
(?P<_q>['\"]).*?(?<!\\)(?P=_q)))
(?P=_v)
))?
# </snip>
)*
)\s*
(?P<is_self_closing>/?) # Self-closing indicator
>) # End of tag
"#).unwrap();
let string = "In this case, $url will indeed contain http://example.com/whatever.jpg. But what happens when you start getting HTML like this:
<img src='http://example.com/whatever.jpg'>
or
<img src=http://example.com/whatever.jpg>
or
<img border=0 src=\"http://example.com/whatever.jpg\">
or
<img border src=\"http://example.com/whatever.jpg\">
or
<img
src=\"http://example.com/whatever.jpg\">
or you start getting false positives from
<!-- // commented out
<img src=\"http://example.com/outdated.png\">
-->
<script><![CDATA[ This is <b>not</b> parsed ]]></script>
<asd ASD=asd>
<!-- // commented out <img src=\"http://example.com/outdated.png\"> -->
No quotes:
<iframe src=test.html target=xyz></ iframe >
Self-closing tag:
<a href=test.html target=xyz/>
Self closing tag with a space before closure:
<a href=test.html target=xyz />
Double quotes:
<a href=\"test.html\" target=\"xyz\">
Single quotes:
<a href='test.html' target='xyz'>
Escaping double quotes:
<a href=\"test.html?val=1\" title=\"\\\"No rules exist\\\" Andre Breton's quote\">
Escaping single quotes (also with spaces between equals signs):
<a href = \"test.html?val=1\" title = 'Charlie\\'s Angels'>
Tag without closure (ignored):
<a href = \"test.html?val=1\" title='Charlie\\'s Angels'
Tag without opening (ignored):
a href = \"test.html?val=1\" title=\"Charlie\\\"s Angels\">
";
// result will be an iterator over tuples containing the start and end indices for each match in the string
let result = regex.captures_iter(string);
for mat in result {
println!("{:?}", mat);
}
}
Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Rust, please visit: https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/